AmericanRoadTripPowerPointPresentation1
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ASO Quapaw String Quartet
presents
American Road Trip
Arkansas
Learning through the Arts
Music of America
New York City
George Gershwin
Washington D.C.
John Philip Sousa
Los Angeles &
Hollywood,
California
Carl Stalling
Texarkana, Arkansas
Scott Joplin
Nashville,
Tennessee
Jay Ungar and
Molly Mason
How does music around America sound?
– the same – or different from each area
When Did These Composers Live?
1850
1950
1900
2000
Sousa
1854
1932
Joplin
1867
1917
Gershwin
1898
1937
Williams
1932
Ungar & Mason
1940’s
Sousa and Williams wrote big music for bands and orchestra
to entertain at concerts and in movies.
The music of Joplin, Gershwin and Unger/Mason connects
to old-time American folk tunes and dance rhythms.
John Philip Sousa
Sousa wrote 136 marches for marching bands in
parades and concerts. They also made ragtime
music popular.
Stars and Stripes Forever
- National March of U.S.A.
Semper Fidelis
- March of the U.S. Marine Corps
U.S. Field Artillery
- Became The Army Goes Rolling Along,
U.S. Army official song
The Washington Post
- Theme for TV’s Monty Python’s Flying
Circus
The Sousa band toured the world for 40 years.
Scott Joplin
‘King of Ragtime’
Ragtime music had syncopated
or ‘ragged’ rhythms. It was
popular dance music in New
Orleans and St. Louis.
Joplin played as a solo
pianist and with dance
orchestras. They toured
from Texas to New York. He
wrote many ragtime
pieces.
George Gershwin
Trained as a classical pianist
Influenced by composers in Europe
Learned to love ragtime and jazz music
He said, “True music must reflect the thought and
aspirations of the people and time. My people are
Americans. My time is today.”
John Williams
Conductor of
the
Boston Pops
for 13 years
Studied classical music
Played jazz piano in bands
Conducted and arranged
music in the U.S. Air Force
♬ Composed for concerts
and movies
A ‘neo-Romantic’ composer because his pieces
have long, flowing melodies and are arranged for
big orchestras (similar to the Romantic Period – late 1800’s).
His themes often represent a person, setting or
idea in a movie, such as the SuperMan theme.
Award winner
for film scores
Jay Ungar & Molly Mason
• Part of the folk music scene in the
60’s and 70’s.
• Play American fiddle and bass
acoustic guitar.
They play music of the people and popularize its sound:
by playing it on radio shows and
by creating film scores using the music of the period.
Ashokan Farewell, the theme for PBS miniseries Civil War
Folk music continues to live because it is performed
and its themes and sounds are used in new works.
Dance Transforms with the Music
Juba Dancing
from Africa
Tap Dancing
Free Form Dancing
Social Dancing
Theatrical Dancing
Ragtime & Jazz
Dancing – 1920’s
Swing Dancing –
1940’s
Modern dance
Rock ‘n’ Roll – 1950’s
and 1960’s
African Dance in Modern Classical Dance
(dancers from the African American Dance Company of Indiana University)
Many groups in America use African dance
styles in modern classical dance.